Issues Archives - Canadian Architect https://www.canadianarchitect.com/category/issues/ magazine for architects and related professionals Thu, 28 Nov 2024 23:48:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 December 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/december-2024/ Mon, 02 Dec 2024 06:10:24 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003780265

  In our December issue 2024 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence: The Winners Are… The 2024 Canadian Architect Awards were tightly contended. Over two days of deliberation in October, jurors Andrea Wolff, Matthew Hickey, and D’Arcy Jones considered 143 entries to arrive at a selection of four Awards of Excellence winners and six Award of […]

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In our December issue

2024 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence: The Winners Are…

The 2024 Canadian Architect Awards were tightly contended. Over two days of deliberation in October, jurors Andrea Wolff, Matthew Hickey, and D’Arcy Jones considered 143 entries to arrive at a selection of four Awards of Excellence winners and six Award of Merit winners. They also considered 35 student entries—the top architecture thesis projects in Canada as nominated by their schools—to select three Student Award of Excellence winners.

Photographer Lisa Stinner-Kun joined the jury to select one Photo Award of Excellence winner and two Photo Award of Merit winners. In our newly introduced Student Photo category, one entry was selected to receive a Student Photo Award of Excellence.

You can read our jury’s full comments here.

Here are this year’s winners:

 

Awards of Excellence

Confederation Centre of the Arts Revitalization | Abbott Brown Architects

Montreal Old Port Infill | architecture écologique

11 Brock | SnN Architects+ Planners

Warehouse Park Pavilion | gh3* (park design in collaboration with design lead CCxA)

 

Awards of Merit

Éva-Circé-Côté Library | Lapointe Magne et associés and L’OEUF Architectes, in consortium

Bibliothèque de Mont-Laurier | Chevalier Morales Architectes

Annex House | WAO (Wei Architecture & Objects Ltd.)

The Open: East Village Public Washroom & Pickleball Court | Public City

Coronation Park Sports and Recreation Centre | Joint venture between hcma architecture + design and Dub Architects, in collaboration with FaulknerBrowns

Tofino Fish Pier | Leckie Studio Design + Architecture

 

Student Awards of Excellence

Heritage of a Rural Patrimony | Rosalie Laflamme, Université Laval

Parkdale People’s Palace | Matthew Dlugosz, University of Waterloo

Ascending Worlds | Jose Power, University of Toronto

 

Photo Award of Excellence

L’École du Zénith | James Brittain

 

Photo Awards of Merit

St. Albert Place | Stationpoint Photographic

La Tour du Port | James Brittain

 

Student Photo Award of Excellence

Église Précieux-Sang | Jenna Carolynne Bosc

 

On behalf of the magazine and the jurors, we wish to extend thanks to all of our readers who participated in this year’s awards program, and congratulations to all of this year’s winners.

See all the 2024 Awards of Excellence winners

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November 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/november-2024/ Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:54:39 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003779691

  In our November issue Architecture has traditionally been a profession of generalists, but technical specialization plays an increasing role in today’s landscape. Our November issue focuses on projects whose success hinged on in-depth technical knowledge. We start by visiting T3 Bayside (3XN with WZMH) and T3 Sterling Road (DLR Group with WZMH), two Toronto […]

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In our November issue

Architecture has traditionally been a profession of generalists, but technical specialization plays an increasing role in today’s landscape. Our November issue focuses on projects whose success hinged on in-depth technical knowledge.

We start by visiting T3 Bayside (3XN with WZMH) and T3 Sterling Road (DLR Group with WZMH), two Toronto projects that are testing the market for mass timber commercial buildings. Lloyd Alter explores how dowel-laminated timber (DLT) and cross-laminated timber (CLT) products are deployed in the two buildings, and what it means for their sustainability profile.

Out towards the city’s Pearson airport, we dive under the wings at Bombardier’s new manufacturing facility, by NEUF architect(e)s. Ian Chodikoff details the highly detailed work that went into creating the mega-sized facility for the precision-driven work of assembling aircraft.

For our cover story, Odile Hénault looks at how the rest of Canada can learn from Quebec’s provincial system of architecture competitions. Case in point: two recent Montreal libraries, both complex project which adaptively reuse existing structures to create vibrant new community hubs.

Last, Adele Weder visited Old Crow, Yukon, at the northwest corner of the country. Here, Kobayashi + Zedda Architects has crafted a community centre for the Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation. Weder argues that the technical rules for building may need to be rethought for the North: “it may be time to consider encouraging flexibility with certain code requirements and energy targets in such communities.”

Our November issue also includes a review of a compendium on vernacular architecture, an interview with Canadian planetarium expert Bill Chomik, and an afternoon at a giant domino run in Toronto.

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

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October 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/october-2024/ Tue, 01 Oct 2024 05:15:04 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003779256

  In our October issue Three years ago, Canadian Architect and Twenty + Change first partnered to bring a curated showcase of emerging Canadian architectural practices to the pages of this magazine. This year, we are thrilled to have done so again. The sixth edition of Twenty + Change, called New Perspectives, is the result of […]

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In our October issue

Three years ago, Canadian Architect and Twenty + Change first partnered to bring a curated showcase of emerging Canadian architectural practices to the pages of this magazine. This year, we are thrilled to have done so again.

The sixth edition of Twenty + Change, called New Perspectives, is the result of an open call for submissions, and careful consideration by a curatorial team representing architectural practices from across the country—many of whom were showcased in earlier editions of Twenty + Change. The team included Marie-Chantal Croft of Écobâtiment (Quebec City), Susan Fitzgerald of FBM (Halifax), Andrew Hill of StudioAC (Toronto), Ben Klumper of Modern Office of Design + Architecture (Calgary), , Heather Dubbeldam of Dubbeldam Architecture + Design (Toronto) and Elsa Lam of Canadian Architect (Toronto).

One of the trends we observed in this year’s selection was the rise of firms rooted in environmental sustainability practices. Three of the firms chosen this year—architecture écologique (Montreal), BoON (Quebec City), and Poiesis (Toronto)—boast one or more Passive House-certified designers, giving them the expertise to design buildings that require minimal operating energy.

Other firms, such as COMN (Toronto) and Alexandre Bernier (Montreal), are focused on infill housing, contributing towards a vital component of a sustainable future. Further west, AtLRG (Winnipeg) has built a reputation for tackling complex urban sites, from new-builds to office-to-residential conversions.

One of the most ambitious change-makers in our showcase is Mindful Architecture (North Vancouver), a partnership between an architect and an industrial designer with a patented cradle-to-cradle living wall system. Their mass timber Métis Cultural Centre in Fort McMurray, Alberta, is currently under construction, and projects in development include insulation made of human hair, and a 3D-printed solar pit house inspired by traditional circular Indigenous dwellings.

The idea of replacing conventional construction with technologydriven solutions is also key to projects by Leckie Studio Architecture + Design (Vancouver) and VFA Architecture + Design (Toronto). While both firms practice conventionally, they also have side-hustles: Leckie’s Backcountry Hut and TripTych are prefabricated designs for cabins and urban housing; VFA’s Ukkei Homes harnesses prefabrication to create affordable laneway suites that can be added to existing properties.

What is the potential of new models for practicing architecture? Two Montreal firms—LAAB and Pivot—are asking precisely this question. LAAB leans heavily on quantitative analysis, using UX modelling to ground services anchored in strategic design. Pivot, for its part, is one of a handful of architecture co-ops in Canada—an egalitarian model that opposes the hierarchical structure of traditional architectural practices.

Cross-disciplinarity is in the DNA of another trio of firms. Nonument (Toronto) positions itself at the intersection of art and architecture, while Future Simple Studio (Montreal) embraces branding and object prototyping alongside residential and commercial interiors, and Oxbow (Regina and Saskatoon) describes architecture as a subset of landscape design.

The broader context—whether a forested West Coast island, northern city, or southern metropolis—is key to a set of practices that might be seen as addressing the concerns of critical regionalism. Laura Killam (Vancouver) is deeply attuned to her childhood landscapes along the Salish Sea, while s.no has set up a thriving practice in Whitehorse, and blanchette’s designs carry an intent to bring out the Nordic character of Montreal.

Three final firms take a cross-cultural approach to architecture. Odami (Toronto) is a partnership that blends and blurs ideas from one partner’s training in Europe with the other’s Canadian education. Rafael Santa Ana Architecture Workshop (Vancouver) prides itself on a diverse staff comprised mostly of newcomers to Canada, who bring a vibrancy of ideas to the practice. And EHA (Vancouver) takes both a cross-cultural and cross-generational view of design: they specialize in environments for community- based elder care, with several initial projects blending in elements from traditional Japanese homes to align with their clients’ background.

In the AIA Canada Society Journal, Pauline Thimm interviews Daerion Williams and Maisie Berens, co-presidents of the Indigenous Design and Planning Students Association (IDPSA) at the University of Manitoba, about the unique challenges of emerging as Indigenous design professionals.

Rounding out our October issue, this month’s editorial reflects on what the long entry-ramp to establishing your own firm means for architects. We also include some tips on marketing for small firms, and take a peek at a new exhibition on the work of Kiyoshi Izumi, Canada’s first known architect of Japanese descent.

-Elsa Lam, editor, with Heather Dubbeldam, Twenty+Change

The twenty selected firms listed alphabetically are:

Alexandre Bernier, Montreal, Quebec

Architecture écologique, Montreal, Quebec

AtLRG Architecture, Winnipeg, Alberta

blanchette archi.design, Montreal, Quebec

BoON Architecture, Quebec City, Quebec

COMN Architects, Toronto, Ontario

EHA, Vancouver, BC

Future Simple Studio, Montreal, Quebec

LAAB architecture, Montreal, Quebec

Laura Killam Architecture, Vancouver, BC

Leckie Studio Architecture + Design, Vancouver, BC

Mindful Architecture, North Vancouver, BC

Nonument, Toronto, Ontario

Odami. Toronto, Ontario

Oxbow Architecture, Regina and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

Pivot, Montreal, Quebec

Poiesis Architecture, Toronto, Ontario

Rafael Santa Ana Architecture Workshop, Vancouver, BC

s.no architecture, Whitehorse, Yukon

VFA Architecture + Design, Toronto, Ontario

 

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September 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/september-2024/ Sun, 01 Sep 2024 04:15:01 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003778658

  In our September issue Our September issue opens with an update about a court challenge to the Rebuilding Ontario Place Act, which enables the province to bypass environmental assessments and heritage regulations in the redevelopment of this designated cultural landscape. While the challenge failed, it brings light on how the present provincial government has […]

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In our September issue

Our September issue opens with an update about a court challenge to the Rebuilding Ontario Place Act, which enables the province to bypass environmental assessments and heritage regulations in the redevelopment of this designated cultural landscape. While the challenge failed, it brings light on how the present provincial government has been actively reshaping the legislative environment, sidestepping heritage and planning laws for the purpose of facilitating private development.

On a brighter note, we take a look at the celebratory events underway to mark the 100th anniversary of architect Arthur Erickson’s birth. The centenary is being marked by a film festival, lectures, exhibitions, and other events across the country—as well as the reopening of the Museum of Anthropology, which has been renewed (and in large part, rebuilt) by longtime Erickson collaborator Nick Milkovich.

September is back-to-school season, and our reviews focus on new school and university buildings. First up is a look at the four completed elementary schools that were part of Quebec’s Lab-École program. Design competitions were held to create model schools on the sites, which span the province, with impressive results.

In Montreal, we also look at the HEC business school’s Hélène Desmarais building, designed by Provencher_Roy. Situated on a steep, comb-shaped site next to a basilica, the building deftly brings clarity to its challenging infill location.

We also head to the East Coast to visit the Canadian Centre for Climate Change and Adaptation at UPEI, designed by Baird Sampson Neuert architects. Like the province it’s located in, the building punches above its weight in its sustainability achievements—all on a modest budget and tight timeline.

Architects themselves are often lifetime learners. Lawrence Bird visits three designers in Western Canada whose fabrication arms—Patkau Design Lab, Omer Arbel, and Anvil Tree—allow them to explore essential ideas about architecture.

Our issue also includes reviews of new books on contemporary West Coast houses, the battle to build Toronto’s Luminous Veil, and Louise Blanchard Bethune, the United States’ first professional woman architect.

On a final sombre note, David Covo pays tribute to longtime McGill School of Architecture director Derek Drummond, who passed away last year.

-Elsa Lam, editor

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August 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/august-2024/ Thu, 01 Aug 2024 04:20:48 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003778019

  In our August issue Our August issue celebrates the 12 winners of the Governor General’s Medals in Architecture. This year’s Medals went to projects from coast to coast, from the SFU Stadium by Perkins&Will in Vancouver, BC, to Cabot Cliffs Residences, Halfway Hut and Pro Shop by FBM Architecture | Interior Design in Cape […]

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In our August issue

Our August issue celebrates the 12 winners of the Governor General’s Medals in Architecture. This year’s Medals went to projects from coast to coast, from the SFU Stadium by Perkins&Will in Vancouver, BC, to Cabot Cliffs Residences, Halfway Hut and Pro Shop by FBM Architecture | Interior Design in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.

We also take a look at a cluster of past Governor General’s Medal-winning-buildings, situated around a single intersection in downtown Waterloo, Ontario. Jake Nicholson considers the impact of four buildings at this corner: the Seagram Museum by Barton Myers (GG, 1986); the Canadian Clay & Glass Gallery by Patkau Architects (GG, 1997), the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics by Saucier+Perrotte (GG, 2006) and the Centre for International Governance Innovation by KPMB Architects (GG, 2014).

Further afield, Peter Sealy takes us on a visit to artist Kapwani Kiwanga’s installation, entitled Trinket,  in the Canadian Pavilion at this year’s Venice Art Biennale—which he describes as a “stunning delight” that is also “a provocative commentary upon the exploitative imbalances which fuelled colonial commerce.”

The Moriyama & Teshima-designed Ontario Science Centre was abruptly closed by the Province of Ontario on a Friday in late June, supposedly because of public safety concerns linked to the presence of RAAC (Siporex) roof panels. I was one of the first with architecture-trained eyes to thoroughly read the engineers’ roof report, and to see that it didn’t recommend full closure—as well as realizing that the suspect roof panels weren’t even over key exhibition areas.

In the following weeks, I’ve become deeply involved in advocacy calling on the Province to reopen, repair, and reinvest in the Ontario Science Centre at its current location. A selection of the articles I’ve written on this topic are included in the August issue of Canadian Architect, including my analysis of the RFP for a temporary space, and a synopsis of how we could start paying for long-term repairs by using the money it’s taking to close the building. I’ve since written about the true cost of repairing the Science Centre—which is much less than the numbers the Province has cited—and debunked the Province’s additional reasons behind closing the Science Centre. The closure is based on a manufactured crisis, which wrongfully posits that instead of maintaining this major public building, it should be vacated and demolished.

I would invite readers to consider signing and circulating this petition opposing the closure, including if you are outside of Toronto—and for readers in Ontario to consider writing to your MPP and calling the Premier at 416-325-1941 (lines open 24/7).

-Elsa Lam, editor

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June 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/june-2024/ Sat, 01 Jun 2024 05:00:25 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003777056

  In our June issue Our June issue focuses on health and wellness. For our cover story, Adele Weder travelled to Iqaluit’s Inuusirvik Community Wellness Hub, designed by Toronto-based Lateral Office with Winnipeg-based Verne Reimer Architecture. Inspired by Indigenous vernacular structures, the building is packed with services from a daycare, to wellness research centre, to […]

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In our June issue

Our June issue focuses on health and wellness.

For our cover story, Adele Weder travelled to Iqaluit’s Inuusirvik Community Wellness Hub, designed by Toronto-based Lateral Office with Winnipeg-based Verne Reimer Architecture. Inspired by Indigenous vernacular structures, the building is packed with services from a daycare, to wellness research centre, to community kitchen.

We also review two medical spaces that were crafted with the wellbeing of both patients and staff in mind. First, David T. Fortin visits Jaliya Fonseka’s Galt Clinic in Cambridge, Ontario; next, Naomi Kriss reports on Stantec’s renovation of Mount Sinai’s emergency department in Toronto.

Recreational facilities are also part of our coverage this month. We tour MJMA’s Churchill Meadows Community Centre and Sports Park, the winner of this year’s Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Architecture in Ontario. In Quebec, Odile Hénault reports on the latest phase of the Promenade Samuel-De Champlain, whose design was led by Daoust Lestage Lizotte Stecker. It’s the winner of Quebec’s top architecture award—the Grand Prix d’Excellence.

A trio of book reviews looks at designing for wellness at different scales. Tye Farrow’s Constructing Health looks at the theory and application of salutogenic design—creating buildings that actively promote health. Alan Tate and Marcella Eaton’s Designed Landscapes: 37 Key Projects is a sourcebook of outstanding landscape projects. Zooming out further, Avi Friedman and Alexandra Pollock’s Fundamentals of Planning Cities for Healthy Living looks at urban design’s integral role in shaping public health outcomes.

Rounding out our coverage, Ted Landrum reviews the CCA’s latest documentary film, Where We Grow Older, featuring a pair of progressive visions for senior living. My editorial examines the legislative push in Ontario to accelerate housing approvals, and asks: will it result in more affordable homes?

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

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May 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/may-2024/ Wed, 01 May 2024 05:10:14 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003776537

  In our May issue Our May issue is a celebration of winners. Topping the list is the RAIC’s Gold Medal recipient, Justice Murray Sinclair. His recognition marks the growing importance of dialogues around Indigenization, de-colonization, and reconciliation within Canadian architecture. The RAIC International Prize winner, Aotearoa-based Ngā Aho, recognizes a national organization of Maori […]

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In our May issue

Our May issue is a celebration of winners.

Topping the list is the RAIC’s Gold Medal recipient, Justice Murray Sinclair. His recognition marks the growing importance of dialogues around Indigenization, de-colonization, and reconciliation within Canadian architecture.

The RAIC International Prize winner, Aotearoa-based Ngā Aho, recognizes a national organization of Maori design professionals who have come together to support each other to better serve the design aspirations of Maori communities. Ngā Aho serves as an inspirational model for how Indigenous practitioners can deploy Indigenous ways of knowing and doing to affect positive change in the built and natural environment.

The RAIC’s top architectural practice this year is Dubbeldam Architecture+Design, a Toronto-based studio that blends built work, design research, and advocacy in its commitment to an improved public realm. The RAIC’s emerging practice award goes to Peter Braithwaite Studio, a practice that sees buildings as members of overarching ecological systems.

The winner of the RAIC Research & Innovation Award is Patkau Design Lab, a research and fabrication wing of Patkau Architects. Building Equality in Architecture Toronto (BEAT) cinched the RAIC’s Advocate for Architecture Award. Two RAIC Architectural Journalism and Media Awards were announced: one of which goes to The Edit, a publication by The Site magazine, and the other of which goes to architectural journalist, editor, and advocate Jim Taggart.

We also profile the 12 winning projects from this year’s National Urban Design Awards, a program jointly run by the RAIC, Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP), and Canadian Society of Landscape Architects (CSLA).

My editorial examines the characteristics of the top award programs—and of winning entries.

Our issue also includes reviews of 5468796’s recent publication platform.Middle: Housing for the 99 percent, RIBA’s 100 Women Architects: Architects in Practice, and Marieke Gruwel’s Manitoba Women in Design. We also look at photographer Steven Evans’ homage to Ontario Place. In our In Memoriam section, David Covo pays tribute to architect and educator Radoslav Zuk, who passed away earlier this year.

-Elsa Lam, editor

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April 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/april-2024/ Mon, 01 Apr 2024 05:00:03 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003776090

  In our April issue Our April issue looks at how architects are tackling housing on complex sites. We start in Winnipeg, where 5468796 Architecture has transformed a long-abandoned heritage pumphouse into a vibrant mixed-use development. “A breakthrough was achieved when 5468796’s team (at that time including designer Kenneth Borton) realized that an office floor […]

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In our April issue

Our April issue looks at how architects are tackling housing on complex sites.

We start in Winnipeg, where 5468796 Architecture has transformed a long-abandoned heritage pumphouse into a vibrant mixed-use development. “A breakthrough was achieved when 5468796’s team (at that time including designer Kenneth Borton) realized that an office floor could be hung from an intact gantry crane, locating a new level above and to one side of the machine room,” writes Trevor Boddy. “This created a visually stunning working perch that could be leased to a commercial tenant, tipping the building’s pro forma into viability.”

In Montreal, we visit two projects. First, MSDL Architectes’ Corbusian-inspired Laurent & Clark adds two elegant towers to a site adjacent the Quartier des Spectacles. “More than its striking façades, what distinguishes Laurent & Clark is how its massing intricately responds to the constraints of a complex site,” writes Claire Lubell.

Odile Hénault then tours Laponte Magne et associés’ Îlot Rosemont, a mixed-use social housing development that sets a new benchmark for transit-oriented densification in Montreal. “Municipal leadership should be applauded for leading the way, by demonstrating how its own properties can be developed in ways that embrace complex programs and sites, as well as promoting affordable housing,” writes Hénault.

To complete our tour of la belle province, Marco Marini interviews Suresh Perera about PERCH architecture’s recently completed modular mass timber apartment building in remote Chibougamau, Quebec. Back in Montreal, Peter Sealy reports on Design for the Global Majority, an exhibition that surveys 50 years of research by McGill University’s Minimum Cost Housing Group.

Spring has increasingly meant increased forest fire activity across Canada. Douglas MacLeod examines why those fires are more dangerous than ever—and how architects and homeowners can design and maintain their properties to be “fire smart.”

We round out the issue with reports on a pre-fabricated mass timber approach to transitional housing, an editorial on the effort to reform egress requirements for small multi-unit residential buildings, and a letter to the editor on why the CMHC’s new housing design catalogue isn’t a universal fix for affordability.

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

 

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February 2024 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/february-2024/ Thu, 01 Feb 2024 06:00:07 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003775542

  In our February issue Our February issue explores civic landmarks in cities across Canada. Our cover story is Lawrence Bird’s review of The Leaf, a new conservatory in Winnipeg’s Assiniboine Park designed by KPMB Architects in association with Architecture49 with HTFC Planning & Design and Blackwell. Going up in scale, John Lorinc takes a […]

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In our February issue

Our February issue explores civic landmarks in cities across Canada.

Our cover story is Lawrence Bird’s review of The Leaf, a new conservatory in Winnipeg’s Assiniboine Park designed by KPMB Architects in association with Architecture49 with HTFC Planning & Design and Blackwell.

Going up in scale, John Lorinc takes a visit to The Well—the city’s first mega-development, with seven high- and mid-rises set on the 7.7-acre former Globe and Mail lands in the city’s downtown core. And at a tiny scale, we look at a generator enclosure by RDHA that elevates a mundane piece of infrastructure to become a piece of urban sculpture.

We also dive into two controversies surrounding two future projects. First, my editorial debunks the Ontario government’s plans to relocate the Ontario Science Centre from the landmark Moriyama and Teshima-designed building to Ontario Place. I also take a deep dive into the federal government’s decision to award the design of the National Memorial to Canada’s Mission in Afghanistan to a team different than the one selected by the design competition jury.

Our issue also pays tribute to two landmark figures in Canada’s architectural community. Ronji Boorooah remembers his late colleague and friend Jerome Markson, who passed away this winter; while many in the Winnipeg architecture community have contributed to a book on the life and work of David Penner, who died in 2020.

Our February issue also includes the RAIC Journal, which reports on the organization’s fall Congress on accelerating climate action, and reviews structural engineer Paul Fast’s memoir and Jeannie Marshall’s book All Things Move: Learning to Look at the Sistine Chapel.

-Elsa Lam, editor

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December 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/december-2023/ Fri, 01 Dec 2023 05:05:24 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003774700

  In our December issue 2023 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence: The Winners are… We are proud to announce the winners of the 2023 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence. We had a strong response to the program this year, including 160 project submissions to the professional Awards of Excellence program and 34 submissions to the […]

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In our December issue

2023 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence: The Winners are…

We are proud to announce the winners of the 2023 Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence. We had a strong response to the program this year, including 160 project submissions to the professional Awards of Excellence program and 34 submissions to the Photo Awards of Excellence program. The work of 24 thesis students was nominated by schools of architecture from across Canada.

Jurors Omar Gandhi, Claire Weisz, and Michael Heeney selected five Awards of Excellence winners, eight Award of Merit winners, and three Student Award of Excellence winners. They were joined by photo juror Jacqueline Young to select two Photo Award of Excellence winners.

This year’s winners are featured in the December issue of Canadian Architect. The full jury commentary can be viewed here.

Here are this year’s winners:

Awards of Excellence

The National Centre for Indigenous Laws by a Collaborative Partnership between Two Row Architect (Prime), Teeple Architects Inc., and Low Hammond Rowe Architects

Nelson Pier by MBAC (Urban Design) and SOA (Architect of Record)

Frog Lake First Nations’ Children & Family, Intervention/Prevention Horse Healing Centre by Reimagine Architects Ltd.

Don Mills Jamatkhana and Ismaili Community Centre by architects—Alliance

The New Vic, McGill University by Diamond Schmitt/Lemay Michaud Architectes

 

Awards of Merit

The Marianne and Edward Gibson Art Museum by Hariri Pontarini Architects and Iredale Architecture

Triptych by Leckie Studio Architecture + Design

The Parti Wall by JA Architecture Studio

Indigenous House by Formline Architecture in association with LGA Architectural Partners with Public Work

Dawes Road Library & Community Hub by Perkins&Will and Smoke Architecture

Inuusirvik Community Wellness Hub by Lateral Office (Design Architect), Verne Reimer Architecture Inc. (Prime Consultant)

John Innes Community Recreation Centre by MJMA Architecture & Design

El Aleph – Main House by MacKay-Lyons Sweetapple Architects Limited

 

Student Awards of Excellence

Toronto’s Terrestrial Reefs by Cameron Penney, Carleton University

Kushirikiana Architectural Guide by Jonathan Kabumbe, Laurentian University

The Third Space by Kaamil Allah Baksh, University of Manitoba

 

Photo Awards of Excellence

CAPO by James Brittain

Creating the Landmark Project: Structural Framework by Salina Kassam

 

On behalf of the magazine and the jurors, we wish to extend thanks to all of our readers who participated in this year’s awards program, and congratulations to all of this year’s winners.

See all the 2023 Awards of Excellence winners

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November 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/november-2023/ Wed, 08 Nov 2023 05:10:39 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003774077

  In our November issue In early 2023, the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) and Canadian Architect partnered to refresh and update the Canadian Architectural Practices Benchmark Report, with the goal of providing comprehensive, anonymized data on the current standards for compensation, billings, equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI), and other key indicators among Canadian […]

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In our November issue

In early 2023, the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) and Canadian Architect partnered to refresh and update the Canadian Architectural Practices Benchmark Report, with the goal of providing comprehensive, anonymized data on the current standards for compensation, billings, equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI), and other key indicators among Canadian architectural practices.

This survey and report were last completed in 2011, and prior to that, in 2009. For the 2023 report, we refreshed the 2011 survey, and added new sections related to Indigenous themes and reconciliation, climate action, and EDI. To complete this work, we partnered with Bramm Research Inc., a consultancy which has supported previous editions.

The full report is now available for purchase. Here at Canadian Architect, our November issue delves deep into select findings.

How has the profession been doing in the past decade? Editor Elsa Lam’s introductory piece compares findings from the 2011 and 2023 reports, and presents comments on what architects see as the greatest challenges to the profession in the coming five years.

Architect and practice management leader Rick Linley shares two top indicators of an architecture firm’s financial health, and AED business strategist Elaine Panel offers other KPIs to help build value in firms with a view towards succession planning.

Taking a North American perspective, KPMB managing partner Phyllis Crawford examines the intertwined economic forecasts for architecture in Canada and the United States, and strategies for firms to address the current economic climate.

Leadership and marketing consultant Russell Pollard contributes two pieces: one on the value of marketing in aligning a firm’s brand story with business development, and a second on managing the “new normal” of remote work and flexibility. For recruitment consultant Vered Klein, flexibility is also a component in a full compensation package that looks beyond salary to incentivize staff.

How are Canadian architects doing on equity and sustainability? Rhys Phillips look at how the profession is making progress towards gender equity, but how much work remains to be done. And Terri Peters and Ted Kesik discuss how a series of recent surveys point to the need to adapt education and practice to address urgent sustainability challenges.

The fall has been a difficult time for the Canadian architectural community, with a number of deaths that have affected many of us deeply. We have collected several tributes to George Baird (1939-2023). Trevor Boddy offers a piece on the importance of Raymond Moriyama (1929-2023)’s life and work. Lam’s editorial renders homage to landscape architect Claude Cormier (1960-2023).

Rounding out our most content-packed issue of the year are several more pieces. Jake Nicholson investigates what legacy means for architects through interviews with Daniel Cohlmeyer, Shallyn Murray, John Patkau and Silva Stojak. Cameron Cummings reviews Canadian ex-pat curator Carson Chan’s inaugural exhibition at NYC’s MoMA. Christian Maidankine reflects on experiencing aphantasia as an architecture student. And Chris Gower and Martin Segger reflect on the work of mid-century Victoria architect John Di Castri.

Finally, we look at several recent books: the new Building Arguments series with writings by Arthur Erickson and Cornelia Oberlander, the 5th edition of Exploring Vancouver, a volume on the rise of awards in architecture, a book about workers’ cottages in Toronto, and a place-based architectural memoir.

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

Full list of articles in Canadian Architect’s series on the Canadian Architectural Practices Benchmark Report (2023 Edition):

·        Benchmark Report 2023: The State of Canadian Architectural Practice

·        Benchmark Report 2023: How’s Your Firm’s Financial Health?

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Mixed Prospects

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Architecture and Capital “M” Marketing

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Firm Expectations—Managing Remote Work and Flexibility

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Women in Canadian Architecture—An Update

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Competitive Compensation

·        Benchmark Report 2023: Looking Ahead—Succession Planning and Firm Value

·        Benchmark 2023: Future Forward—Adaptive Change in Architecture Education and Practice

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October 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/october-2023/ Sun, 01 Oct 2023 04:10:25 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003773523

  In our October Issue Our October issue offers a variety of perspectives on the urgent topic of sustainability in architecture. For our cover story, Greg Whistance-Church visited S2 Architecture and gh3*’s Windermere Fire Station No. 31 in Edmonton. The striking, photovoltaic-topped design delivers on dual promises, writes Whistance-Church: “creating an expressive form that includes […]

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In our October Issue

Our October issue offers a variety of perspectives on the urgent topic of sustainability in architecture.

For our cover story, Greg Whistance-Church visited S2 Architecture and gh3*’s Windermere Fire Station No. 31 in Edmonton. The striking, photovoltaic-topped design delivers on dual promises, writes Whistance-Church: “creating an expressive form that includes its community, and performing as a net-zero building that wears its sustainability credentials on its sleeve.”

We also take a look at another Edmonton project that turns a large solar panel array into a design feature—an office/college building called The Edge, designed by Dub Architects.

Ted Kesik takes a bigger picture in considering the past twenty years of architectural sustainability practices in Canada, and what’s needed for the current and coming generations of architects to tackle the wickedly complex problem of sustainability. “Unlike two decades ago, the issues and challenges are not primarily technological,” he writes. “They are cultural.”

Next up is an overview of three major mass timber innovations by Canadians: Intelligent City’s robotic mass timber factory in Delta, BC; Moriyama Teshima and Acton Ostry’s Limberlost in Toronto; and Michael Green Architecture’s Flora in Nanterre, France. “As more innovative and impressive projects near completion and prove their mettle, Canadian architects will continue to show that they remain at the forefront of mass timber innovation,” writes Adele Weder.

Our project coverage wraps up with a look at Park by Sidewalk Citizen in Calgary. Designed and built by local firm Studio North, the design turns humble plywood into a dining room draped in cascading ribs, inspired by Victorian greenhouses.

Calgary is one of the leading cities in converting office stock to residential and mixed-use—the kind of adaptive reuse that will be a necessary part of building sustainably. Stephanie Calvet reports on the Alberta capital’s strategy, and what other cities can learn from it.

This month’s editorial looks at the dilemma facing Ontario’s former Architectural Technologists OAA, while the AIA Canada Journal, published within our pages, considers the impact of tools like MIdjourney on visual communications in architecture, and reports on a panel discussion about the future of the profession.

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

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September 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/september-2023/ Fri, 01 Sep 2023 04:51:35 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003773217

  In our September Issue Our September issue looks at a series of projects where craft and collaboration have resulted in exceptional results. Toronto’s Ontario Court of Justice, designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop and NORR, is our cover story. In his review, Joe Lobko describes how an exceptional attention to detail resulted in a […]

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In our September Issue

Our September issue looks at a series of projects where craft and collaboration have resulted in exceptional results.

Toronto’s Ontario Court of Justice, designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop and NORR, is our cover story. In his review, Joe Lobko describes how an exceptional attention to detail resulted in a building that negotiates the rigorous security and logistical requirements for this building type, while creating a transparent, light-filled atmosphere to reflect Canada’s open court system.

David Down reviews the Aga Khan Garden (Nelson Byrd Landscape Architects) and its new pavilion, The Diwan (AXIA Design Associates, Arriz + Co., and Kasian). “It is rare in landscape architecture and architecture to find a successful fusion of the formal and informal, the natural and the ordered. Equally rare are contemporary interpretations of traditional forms which do not cross the line into kitsch,” writes Down. “The Aga Khan Garden and the Diwan achieve the balance beautifully, with designs that are rooted in ancient heritage while feeling completely comfortable in the contemporary Canadian landscape.”

On a smaller scale, we turn our attention to architectural historian Robert Jan Van Pelt and historian Miriam Greenbaum’s carefully crafted backyard library. Zaven Titizian documents how Paul Dowling Architects started a design-build firm to lead the project’s construction. “While some designers might pass off work to a contractor once the initial design is complete, for Paul, this is when ‘most of the invention begins—and it’s too interesting not to be involved in that part of the work,'” writes Titizian. The resulting building became part of the educational experience for several University of Waterloo students, who participated in the construction, and continues to create a teaching moment for young prospective architects.

The issue is bookended by an editorial on how a largely women-led team contributed to the enduring success of the Calgary Central Library, and by Hadani Ditmars’ account of an annual tour of West Vancouver’s modern and contemporary homes.

Finally, a reminder that the deadline to enter the Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence is quickly approaching. Monday, September 11 is the date by which to submit your design or construction-phase projects.

-Elsa Lam, editor

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August 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/august-2023/ Sun, 30 Jul 2023 09:10:54 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003772896

  In our August issue Our August issue opens with an editorial on the Ontario government’s proposal to redevelop Ontario Place, and opposition to the current plans. While debate continues over the intertwined futures of Ontario Place and the Ontario Science Centre, Trevor Boddy reports on the successful revitalization of a West Coast architectural masterwork: […]

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In our August issue

Our August issue opens with an editorial on the Ontario government’s proposal to redevelop Ontario Place, and opposition to the current plans.

While debate continues over the intertwined futures of Ontario Place and the Ontario Science Centre, Trevor Boddy reports on the successful revitalization of a West Coast architectural masterwork: Arthur Erickson and Geoffrey Massey’s Simon Fraser University. His review considers the positive impact of two recent developments on the Burnaby mountain campus: a comprehensive public realm renovation by Public Architecture, and a new Student Union Building by Perkins&Will.

Coverage of big-picture issues continues in two articles. First up: the findings of a decade-long report on the state of the architecture profession in Canada. The Rise for Architecture report asks: How can architecture continue to be relevant? What are the profession’s duties in addressing the intertwined crises of global climate change and social inequity? The report includes calls to action for architects, professional organizations, and schools of architecture.

What are architecture’s limits in tackling wider issues? Adele Weder reports on the attempt of a large group of architecture academics, practitioners, and activists to address the housing crisis in the exhibition Not for Sale! at the Venice Biennale.

In this month’s RAIC Journal, scholar Jean-Pierre Chupin reports on another effort underway to understand the social impact of architecture: a multi-nodal research project involving schools or architecture, municipal agencies, and community groups across Canada. The study asks: How can our definitions of architectural quality expand to include the social dimension and lived experience of everyday people?

Three exceptional office buildings are part of this month’s reviews. Bruce Haden visits Focal on Third, a terracotta-clad building in Vancouver by PH5 that raises the bar for spec office developments. Odile Hénault reports on Anne Carrier Architecture’s 1500 rue Métivier, the unexpectedly urbane headquarters for a collective of poultry farmers in Lévis, Quebec. And Jason Brijraj reports on the Wellesley Institute’s new home in Toronto, a pair of townhouses adaptively reused in a design by AGATHOM.

Our issue closes out with a look at a new take on an old design: the original scheme for Safdie’s Habitat 67, now rendered in virtual reality, and as futuristic a vision today as it was over 50 years ago.

-Elsa Lam, editor

 

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June 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/june-2023/ Thu, 01 Jun 2023 05:00:04 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003771927

  In our June issue Our June issue spotlights new cultural projects in Canada. On the Atlantic Coast, Abbott Brown’s Highland Village Interpretive Centre puts a contemporary spin on Cape Breton’s cultural landscape. In Fredericton, KPMB’s addition to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery is a masterpiece of context sensitivity. Public libraries are key facilities for many […]

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In our June issue

Our June issue spotlights new cultural projects in Canada.

On the Atlantic Coast, Abbott Brown’s Highland Village Interpretive Centre puts a contemporary spin on Cape Breton’s cultural landscape. In Fredericton, KPMB’s addition to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery is a masterpiece of context sensitivity.

Public libraries are key facilities for many communities. Two libraries in Edmonton—the Capilano Branch by Patkau Architects with Group2, and the Calder Branch by AtelierTAG with The Marc Boutin Architectural Collaborative—approach the typology from different angles, with striking results. We also visit LGA Architectural Partners’ renovation of the Albert Campbell Library in Toronto, a brilliant re-thinking of the 1970s Fairfield & DuBois building.

Have you tried ChatGPT for responding to RFPs? Proposal writing specialist Jake Nicholson did, and reports back on how it went.

To round out things out, we’re broadcasting Moriyama Teshima Architects’ statement opposing the proposed demolition of the Ontario Science Centre. Our June issue also includes AIA Canada Society’s interview with accessibility consultant Darby Lee Young, and reviews of two new books: Alissa North’s Innate Terrain and Hans Ibelings’ Modern Architecture: A Planetary Warming History.

Finally, we pay tribute to our magazine’s production manager, Laura Moffatt, who passed away this spring.

-Elsa Lam, editor

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May 2023 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/may-2023/ Mon, 01 May 2023 05:02:39 +0000 https://www.canadianarchitect.com/?p=1003771549

  In our May issue Our May issue celebrates the winners of the RAIC’s 2023 annual awards. These prestigious national awards recognize architectural practices, people, research, and initiatives that make significant contributions to Canadian architecture. The Gold Medal—the RAIC’s highest honour—goes to the late Claude Provencher, FRAIC. Co-founder of one of Canada’s most significant architecture firms, Provencher has […]

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In our May issue

Our May issue celebrates the winners of the RAIC’s 2023 annual awards. These prestigious national awards recognize architectural practices, people, research, and initiatives that make significant contributions to Canadian architecture.

The Gold Medal—the RAIC’s highest honour—goes to the late Claude Provencher, FRAIC. Co-founder of one of Canada’s most significant architecture firms, Provencher has long been recognized for the quality of his realized projects, as well as for his trailblazing work as part of the new urban architecture movement of the late 1970s in Canada.

Patkau Architects is the recipient of the RAIC Architectural Practice Award. “Patkau Architects has remained a north star for over forty years: providing practitioners and the academy alike with a model for the authentic pursuit of design excellence in a range of building typologies and budgets,” writes the jury.

Two practices received the RAIC’s Emerging Architectural Practice Award: Toronto-based Studio of Contemporary Architecture (SOCA) was noted as “a new voice in Canadian architecture that is approaching a wide range of projects with an acute sensitivity to social justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion.” Dartmouth-based Fathom Studio was seen as “differentiating itself by confidently curating an interdisciplinary approach, seamlessly integrated within one studio, which resets the way architects collaborate and engage with their teams, clients, communities, and contexts.”

Carol Bélanger received an Advocate for Architecture Award, recognizing the work he has done in revamping architectural procurement for the City of Edmonton to prioritize quality designs. As City Architect, Bélanger has facilitated the design and construction of public spaces and facilities that have improved the daily lives of many Edmontonians, and in doing so, garnered excitement and respect for what good architecture can mean for a growing city.

A second Advocate for Architecture Award was given to Kollectif, a Québec-based entity that is a key resource for the province’s architectural community. “This outward-focused organization was conceived to spotlight, advocate for, promote, and raise the profile of architects both to the public and to one another,” writes the jury. “Through their various campaigns, they have played a unique role in the promotion of architectural practice across Québec, making it accessible to the public while connecting practices to each other.”

The RAIC’s new Research & Innovation Award recognized Limberlost Place by Moriyama & Teshima Architects and Acton Ostry Architects. Under construction in Toronto, the mass timber project combines design and structural innovation with advanced prefabricated, tall-building façade systems, as well as an optimized use of decentralized mechanical systems working in consort with passive systems. The result is a building that provides the healthiest environment for both its users and for the planet.

Two RAIC Architectural Journalism and Media Award recipients were named. ᐊᖏᕐᕋᒧᑦ / Ruovttu Guvlui / Towards Home, is an Indigenous-led exhibition and publication project hosted by the CCA that explores how Inuit, Sámi, and other communities across the Arctic are creating self-determined spaces. Dalhousie Architectural Press was recognized as Canada’s most prolific and dedicated publisher of books on our country’s modern and contemporary architecture.

Finally, our May issue also visits Polymétis’ Pergola Garden in Richmond, BC, and celebrates all of our mothers—especially those who followed a path in architecture before us. Happy Mother’s Day!

-Elsa Lam, editor

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